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Ebola, Bombs, and Migrants
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13 October 2026

A searing account of three interconnected global crises that defined the 2010s, and a powerful invitation to respond with compassionate solidarity.
In Ebola, Bombs, and Migrants, Dr. Joanne Liu, former International President of Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières, draws on frontline experience to examine three major humanitarian crises of the 2010s, revealing the global obsession with national security and its capacity to overshadow our responsibility to protect vulnerable populations.
Since the early 2000s, a world shaped by 9/11 has retreated into fear, strengthening borders and eroding the mechanisms of international cooperation. From West Africa to the Mediterranean and into Afghanistan, Dr. Liu shows how, despite the best efforts of frontline responders, the international community has repeatedly chosen containment over compassion, and politics over principle.
This urgent, authoritative work urges readers to connect past tragedies to current circumstances, reckoning with the cost of disengagement to ultimately reclaim a vision of shared humanity in the face of global crisis.
Preface
Introduction: The Security Obsession
Chapter 1: A Brief History of Doctors Without Borders/Medecins Sans Frontières
Chapter 2: In the Time of Ebola
Chapter 3: The Angel of Death
Chapter 4: Humanity in Movement
Conclusion: Anything but Giving Up